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The mass street demonstrations that followed the 2020 police murder
of George Floyd were perhaps the largest in American history. These
events confirmed that even in a digital era, people rely on public
dissent to communicate grievances, change public discourse, and
stand in collective solidarity with others. However, the
demonstrations also showed that the laws surrounding public protest
make public contention more dangerous, more costly, and less
effective. Police fired tear gas into peaceful crowds, used
physical force against compliant demonstrators, imposed broad
curfews, limited the places where protesters could assemble, and
abused 'unlawful assembly' and other public disorder laws. These
and other pathologies epitomize a system in which public protest is
tightly constrained in the name of public order. Managed Dissent
argues that in order to preserve the venerable tradition of public
protest in the US, we must reform several aspects of the law of
public protest.
Even in an age characterized by increasing virtual presence and
communication, speakers still need physical places in which to
exercise First Amendment liberties. This book examines the critical
intersection of public speech and spatiality. Through a tour of
various places on what the author calls the "expressive
topography," the book considers a variety of public speech
activities including sidewalk counseling at abortion clinics,
residential picketing, protesting near funerals, assembling and
speaking on college campuses, and participating in public rallies
and demonstrations at political conventions and other critical
democratic events. This examination of public liberties, or speech
out of doors, shows that place can be as important to one's
expressive experience as voice, sight, and auditory function.
Speakers derive a host of benefits, such as proximity, immediacy,
symbolic function, and solidarity, from message placement.
Unfortunately, for several decades the ground beneath speakers'
feet has been steadily eroding. The causes of this erosion are
varied and complex; they include privatization and other loss of
public space, legal restrictions on public assembly and expression,
methods of policing public speech activity, and general public
apathy. To counter these forces and reverse at least some of their
effects will require a focused and sustained effort - by public
officials, courts, and of course, the people themselves.
The mass street demonstrations that followed the 2020 police murder
of George Floyd were perhaps the largest in American history. These
events confirmed that even in a digital era, people rely on public
dissent to communicate grievances, change public discourse, and
stand in collective solidarity with others. However, the
demonstrations also showed that the laws surrounding public protest
make public contention more dangerous, more costly, and less
effective. Police fired tear gas into peaceful crowds, used
physical force against compliant demonstrators, imposed broad
curfews, limited the places where protesters could assemble, and
abused 'unlawful assembly' and other public disorder laws. These
and other pathologies epitomize a system in which public protest is
tightly constrained in the name of public order. Managed Dissent
argues that in order to preserve the venerable tradition of public
protest in the US, we must reform several aspects of the law of
public protest.
We live in an interconnected world in which expressive and
religious cultures increasingly commingle and collide. In a
globalized and digitized era, we need to better understand the
relationship between the First Amendment to the United States
Constitution and international borders. This book focuses on the
exercise and protection of cross-border and beyond-border
expressive and religious liberties, and on the First Amendment's
relationship to the world beyond US shores. It reveals a
cosmopolitan First Amendment that protects cross-border
conversation, facilitates the global spread of democratic
principles, recognizes expressive and religious liberties
regardless of location, is influential across the world, and
encourages respectful engagement with the liberty regimes of other
nations. The Cosmopolitan First Amendment is the product of
historical, social, political, technological and legal
developments. It examines the First Amendment's relationship to
foreign travel, immigration, cross-border communication and
association, religious activities that traverse international
borders, conflicts among foreign and US speech and religious
liberty models, and the conduct of international affairs and
diplomacy.
Even in an age characterized by increasing virtual presence and
communication, speakers still need physical places in which to
exercise First Amendment liberties. This book examines the critical
intersection of public speech and spatiality. Through a tour of
various places on what the author calls the "expressive
topography," the book considers a variety of public speech
activities including sidewalk counseling at abortion clinics,
residential picketing, protesting near funerals, assembling and
speaking on college campuses, and participating in public rallies
and demonstrations at political conventions and other critical
democratic events. This examination of public liberties, or speech
out of doors, shows that place can be as important to one's
expressive experience as voice, sight, and auditory function.
Speakers derive a host of benefits, such as proximity, immediacy,
symbolic function, and solidarity, from message placement.
Unfortunately, for several decades the ground beneath speakers'
feet has been steadily eroding. The causes of this erosion are
varied and complex; they include privatization and other loss of
public space, legal restrictions on public assembly and expression,
methods of policing public speech activity, and general public
apathy. To counter these forces and reverse at least some of their
effects will require a focused and sustained effort - by public
officials, courts, and of course, the people themselves.
We live in an interconnected world in which expressive and
religious cultures increasingly commingle and collide. In a
globalized and digitized era, we need to better understand the
relationship between the First Amendment to the United States
Constitution and international borders. This book focuses on the
exercise and protection of cross-border and beyond-border
expressive and religious liberties, and on the First Amendment's
relationship to the world beyond US shores. It reveals a
cosmopolitan First Amendment that protects cross-border
conversation, facilitates the global spread of democratic
principles, recognizes expressive and religious liberties
regardless of location, is influential across the world, and
encourages respectful engagement with the liberty regimes of other
nations. The Cosmopolitan First Amendment is the product of
historical, social, political, technological and legal
developments. It examines the First Amendment's relationship to
foreign travel, immigration, cross-border communication and
association, religious activities that traverse international
borders, conflicts among foreign and US speech and religious
liberty models, and the conduct of international affairs and
diplomacy.
Regardless of how the presidency of Donald J. Trump ultimately
concludes, a significant part of its legacy will relate to the
First Amendment. The president has publicly attacked the
institutional press and individual reporters, calling them the
"enemy of the people." He has proposed that flag burners be jailed
and de-naturalized, blocked critics from his Twitter page,
communicated hateful and derogatory ideas, and defended the speech
of white nationalists. More than any other modern president, Trump
has openly challenged fundamental First Amendment norms and
principles relating to free speech and free press. These challenges
have come at a time when the institutional press faces economic and
other pressures that negatively affect their functions and
legitimacy, political and other forms of polarization are on the
rise, and protesters face diminished space and opportunities for
exercising free speech rights. The First Amendment in the Trump Era
catalogs and analyzes the various First Amendment conflicts that
have occurred during the Trump presidency. It places these
conflicts in historical context-as part of our current digitized
and polarized era but also as part of a broader narrative
concerning attacks on free speech and press. We must understand
what is familiar in terms of the First Amendment concerns of the
present era, but also what is distinctive about these concerns. The
Trump Era has once again reminded us of the need for a free and
independent press, the need to protect robust and sometimes caustic
criticism of public officials, and the importance of protest and
dissent to effective self-government.
The right to free speech intersects with many other constitutional
rights. Those intersections have significantly influenced the
recognition, scope, and meaning of rights, ranging from freedom of
the press to the Second Amendment right to bear arms. They have
also influenced interpretation of the Free Speech Clause itself.
This book examines the relations between the U.S. Constitution's
Free Speech Clause and other constitutional rights. Free speech
principles and doctrines have brought about constitutional rights
including equal protection, the right to abortion, and the free
exercise of religion. They have also provided mediating principles
for constructive debates about constitutional rights. At the same
time, in its interactions with other constitutional rights, the
Free Speech Clause has also been a complicating force. It has often
dominated rights discourse and has subordinated or supplanted free
press, assembly, petition, and free exercise rights. Currently,
courts and commentators are fashioning the Second Amendment right
to keep and bear arms in the image of the Free Speech Clause.
Borrowing the Free Speech Clause for this purpose may turn out to
be detrimental for both rights. While examining the dynamics that
have brought free speech and other rights together, the book
assesses the products and consequences of these intersections, and
draws important lessons from them about constitutional rights and
constitutional liberty. Ultimately, the book defends a pluralistic
conception of constitutional rights that seeks to leverage the
power of the Free Speech Clause but also tame its propensity to
subordinate, supplant, and eclipse other constitutional rights.
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